Morella Muñoz
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Morella Muñoz | |
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Born | July 29, 1935 Caracas, Venezuela |
Died | July 15, 1995 Caracas, Venezuela |
Contents |
[edit] Early life
Morella Muñoz was born in Caracas on July 29, 1935. She was a popular Venezuelan singer. Her primary education was in the Venezuela Experimental school , Ricardo Zuloaga, and the San José de Tarbes school. In 1946 she entered in the Andrés Bello grammar school, getting up immediately to his music choral, directed by Lorenzo Spinal Figallo, member as well of the university choral created and directed by Antonio Estévez, that insisted on her entrance to the Central University of Venezuela choir.
[edit] Early career
In the selection process she was detected by the professor of Lydian vocalization Butturini de Panaro, that from that moment would become a determining person in her artistic basic and future formation. Already in 1948, one was singing with in the pseudonym of Morella Kenton in Venezuela Broadcaster, entering soon in the television, in the program of the famous entertainer Víctor Saume. In 1953, at the request of professor Panaro, she entered to the Music Superior School, in Santa Capilla to study song, having as teachers Inocente Carreño and Raimundo Pereira in theory and musical scale, Vicente Emilio Sojo, in harmony, and Juan Bautista Plaza in history of music and aesthetic musical comedy. In this period her first classic concert was with the Orfeón Lamas.
In 1957, after graduate from the school, she traveled to Tanglewood (England) to participate in the Berkshire Music Center summer course. In 1958 she traveled again to Europe, where she studied interpretation of chamber music in the Santa Cecilia Academy of Rome, under the direction of Giorgio Favaretto, and simultaneously she attended Italian in the Dante Alighieri Institute.
After this she passed to the Vienna Superior Academy of Music and Art in which she made the song course complete. Also, during this time she was in Quekhoven (Netherlands), where she made courses of song and interpretation with Noemí Perugia.
[edit] Professional career
Six Venezuelan songs of Antonio Estévez and American songs circulated in the Venezuelan discs, selection of spirituals and compositions that she sang in March of 1957 in the concert that offered Pan-American music in the Museo de Bellas Artes of Caracas. In 1961 she sang in the Palazzo Forte of Verona, under the auspices of the Academy of Musical Culture of this city, she gained the Spring Prize of the Prague international contest for singers of academic formation. That same year she contracted marriage with Pedro Alvarez Ibarra of whose union two children were born. After returning to Caracas, was gotten up to the Quinteto Contrapunto, whose first disc of a series of five was recorded in 1962. Soon she returned to Europe and in London she took particular classes with Rozna Side, like part of a vocal technical advanced officer training course. To the return to the country its disc produced in titled England circulated Venezuelan infantile Songs. In 1967 she came to baptism of the disc Alirio and Morella songs, folk music of Venezuela and Christmas songs, interpreted by her and the guitarist Alirio Diaz. Also around this time circulated a series of discs (LP) dedicated to traditional Christmas songs with the participation of several artists. In addition to her numerous presentations in all the country, individual and with figures like Ignacio Figueredo and Fredy Reyna, she participated in several tours, singing not only in the respective capitals but in other important cities of Europe and America. Like recognition to her talent, she was the only South American singer that was included between the new values of the XX century, in the Encyclopedia of the music (Germany 1959/Spain 1970) directed by Fred Hamel and Martín Hürdimann. As far as her repertoire, in the folkloric field Morella Muñoz, interpreted traditional Indians, religious and popular songs, contemporary urban compositions, and in the academic field their interpretations included the concert, mass, oratorio, réquiem, the song of art and the opera, remembering in this last sort their roll of Doña Bárbara. She was considered by many to be the best Latin American interpreter of Brahms. Also, she specialized in the music of Schubert, Schumann, Wolf, Bach, Handel and Mahler.
[edit] Last years
She sang with the Chamber Orchestra of the UCV, the Venezuela Symphony orchestra, the Caracas Philarmonic Orchestra and the National Orchestra Simón Bolivar, being soloist in Mozart's Requiem, Handel's Messiah, Vivaldi's Gloria and Beethoven's Ninth symphony. In 1982 she made an anthological edition of 12 discs, accompanied by the testimonial book the invention by the song by Carlos González Fertile valleys. In 1988 it was the inaugural voice of the First Caracas christmas proclamation, celebrated in the Bolívar square of Caracas. Between 1989 and 1992, she evolved like adviser of the State Culture Minister, with concrete contributions for the creation of the Regional Direction of Development. In 1994 Disco Club Venezolano a compact disc and a book in her honor, titleholders Morella Muñoz, our voice. Throughout her artistic life she received numerous distinctions, among them the National Music Prize in 1992. She died in Caracas July 15, 1995.
[edit] Trivia
- In 2006 Ildemaro Torres made a biographical book about the life of Morella Muñoz, for the Biblioteca Biográfica Venezolana, with the seal of El Nacional, (the cover of this book is the principal photo of this article).
[edit] External links
- Morella Muñoz Foundation
- Morella Muñoz Discography (with the Quinteto Contrapunto)
- Songs of Pilón by Morella Muñoz
- Cantos indígenas by Morella Muñoz